King County is currently updating the year 2000 comprehensive plan
for the Snoqualmie Valley. They propose down-zoning many rural properties
for the purpose of “providing a transition to the Forest Production
District (Snoqualmie Tree Farm) and protect critical habitat areas.” Many rural
landowners would be affected.
Does a 350,000-acre tree farm need a transition? No, and it is its
own critical habitat.
My land has already been substantially down-zoned, from 4 houses
per 10 acres to 1 per 10. Now these public servants have decided 1 house per
20 acres would be appropriate. This severely limits landowner rights and
opportunities for, of course, no compensation whatsoever.
This current proposal, along with King County’s most recent move
of limiting building permits on legally created lots that do not meet
current zoning, clearly hits large rural landowners hardest. There is no justice
in this. This kind of thing is what the Cedar County movement was
all about.
Same idea with the “transfer of development rights” program
where landowners can sell rights to subdivide. If rights have already been
down-zoned away, then there is nothing to sell.
I am calling on the King County Council to kick this down-zone
proposal right back to staff with a `NO’ attached. I hope other landowners
will write, e-mail or call them with the same message.
Turn out for the public meetings at Tolt Middle School in Carnation on
Monday, Jan. 10, 7-9 p.m. and at Preston Community Club on
Wednesday, Jan. 19, 7-9 p.m.
Preston Drew
Carnation